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Deadlines should not live only in calendars, inboxes, and memory. Pete keeps deadline context attached to the case so the firm can see what is coming due and why.

Anchor dates

Deadlines depend on anchor dates. Confirm the underlying date before relying on a deadline calculation. Examples include decision dates, notice dates, SOC dates, hearing dates, and other case events that create timing requirements.

Review before relying

Pete can help surface deadline risk, but the firm remains responsible for docketing, legal review, and final deadline decisions. Use Pete to reduce missed context, not to replace the firm’s docketing discipline.

Desk visibility

Deadline-sensitive work should surface where the attorney or staff member reviews active work. If a deadline looks wrong, correct the anchor date or escalate the issue inside the case.
Last modified on June 22, 2026